Social
Research
Industrial/Selection
Org/Motivation
Training & Devel
100

Theory that states that we feel better when things are consistent.

Heider's balance theory/ psychological balance 

100

Bias that states we tend to ignore the absence of information.

The present/present bias

100

Method of testing that produces the highest score of reliability

Test-retest

100

The degree to which an individual believes that they are capable significant and worthy as an organizational member. It is determined by one's self, others, and the environment.

Organization Based Self Esteem (OBSE)

100

What is more important: psychological or physical fidelity?


(i know this isn't jeopardy format smd)

Psychological

200

Comparing oneself with anyone around them. It is automatic, and we may revise it to focus on people who are similar to us.

Self-verification

200

The most common scale of measurement within the field of i/o.

Interval Scale

200

The most significant act within the field of i/o.

Civil Rights Act of 1964

200

States that the stages in the life cycle of a team are based on the major issues and common problems that groups must deal with during their development

(for double points, explain each stage)

Tuckman's stage model (forming, storming, norming, performing, adjourning)

200

This asks multiple people about: mission goals and objectives, social influence, reward systems, job design, job performance, methods and practices

Requirements analysis

300

Hypothesis that explains: when we feel empathy for a person, we will attempt to help that person for altruistic reasons, regardless of gains

The empathy-altruism hypothesis

300

True or False: Experimental research design is the most common within the field of i/o.

(I know this isn't jeopardy format but stfu)

False

300

Court case that caused the requirement of a job analysis within organizations

Albemarle vs. Moody

300

Claims that how a situation is worded affects the decisions that people make

Framing effects

300

Explain the type of knowledge difference between novices and professionals. 

(SMD)

Novices only have declarative knowledge, not procedural knowledge

400

Explains that when you want to change someone's behavior, you don’t ask someone to do something extreme, you change their behavior little by little

The "normalization of deviance"
400

This approach of research looks at consistency over a general population in an attempt to generalize findings.

Nomothetic approach

400

The most common method used for selection

Situational Interviews

400

This approach for defining leadership states that the role of a leader is to show their subordinates the ‘path’ to success

The contingency approach

400

The 3 characteristics that will affect training transfer.

Opportunity, climate and support

500

The act of responding favorably to an explicit or implicit request offered by others 

(Hint: its one of the terms easily confused: obedience, conformity, compliance or persuasion)

Compliance

500

The four scientific cycles in research.

1. Theory-data cycle

2. Basic-applied research cycle

3. Peer-review cycle

4. Journal-to-Journalsim cycle

500

Eyesenk's 3 personality traits to pay attention to.

(for double points explain why we can't measure these today)

introversion, neuroticism, psychotic

500

This theory explains the relationship between our attitudes and behaviors with human action. It uses preexisting attitudes, combined with our behaviors to predict or explain our current behaviors.

Theory of Reasoned action 

(for an extra 250 name whose theory this is)

500

The most popular theory used in training. 

Reinforcement theory